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Dive into the research topics where Soren Newman is active.

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Featured researches published by Soren Newman.


Society & Natural Resources | 2013

Organic Agriculture as Environmental Reform: A Cross-National Investigation

Kyle W. Knight; Soren Newman

Organic agriculture is a prime case for studying social processes of environmental reform. We empirically assess the environmental consequences of organic agriculture using cross-national data and find that greater area of organic agriculture land is associated with lower fertilizer consumption while larger average organic farm size is associated with higher fertilizer consumption. Then we investigate the cross-national factors influencing organic land area and average farm size. We test hypotheses derived from three theoretical perspectives: neoliberal modernization (NLM) theories, international political economy (IPE) theories, and world polity theory. In support of NLM theories, we find that agricultural export intensity is positively associated with organic agriculture land area. In support of IPE theories, we find that both economic development and agricultural export intensity have significant, positive effects on average organic farm size. World polity theory is supported with a positive association between number of environmental international nongovernmental organizations and organic land.


Organization & Environment | 2013

A Bottle Half Empty: Bottled Water, Commodification, and Contestation

Daniel Jaffee; Soren Newman

Bottled water has rapidly been transformed from an elite niche market into a ubiquitous consumer object. Yet the literature on drinking water privatization has largely neglected the growth of bottled water and its emergence as a global commodity. This article draws on Harvey’s analytic of accumulation by dispossession to explore how commodification unfolds differently across multiple forms of water. Based on ethnographic interviews with participants in two conflicts over spring water extraction in rural U.S. communities by the industry leader Nestlé, we make three arguments. First, contestation over bottled water commodification is refracted through competing framings regarding control over local water that illuminate the industry’s shifting accumulation strategies. Second, conflicts over specific instances of water extraction draw on rival narratives of the purity, uniqueness, and/or mundaneness of this commodity. Third, bottled water’s traits distinguish it materially and conceptually from tap water, necessitating a more nuanced analytical approach to its commodification.


Society & Natural Resources | 2014

Earth, Wind, and Fire: Wildfire Risk Perceptions in a Hurricane-Prone Environment

Soren Newman; Matthew S. Carroll; Pamela J. Jakes; Daniel R. Williams; Lorie Higgins

Wildfire is one of several potential disturbances that could have extraordinary impacts on individuals and communities in fire-prone areas. In this article we describe disturbance risk perceptions from interviews with residents in three Florida communities that face significant wildfire and hurricane risk. Although they live in areas characterized by emergency managers as having high wildfire risk and many participants have direct experience with wildfire, residents tended to share high hurricane and low wildfire risk perceptions. The different perceptions of risk seem linked to several factors: direct hurricane experience, different scales of impact, the local “hurricane culture,” effectiveness of local ordinances and development patterns, perceived predictability of the event, and perceived ability to control the event. This study shows that residents may perceive and act to reduce risk for one disturbance in relation to their perceptions, concern, and actions for another.


Environmental Hazards | 2014

Hurricanes and wildfires: generic characteristics of community adaptive capacity

Soren Newman; Matthew S. Carroll; Pamela J. Jakes; Lorie Higgins

This paper explores the question: to what extent is human community adaptive capacity generic versus hazard-specific? To what extent does having adaptive capacity for one type of disturbance indicate that communities also have adaptive capacity for other types of disturbance that they currently or may someday face? We did in-depth case studies in two Lee County, Florida communities to explore the extent to which residents have adaptive capacity for both hurricanes and wildfires. Although wildfire risk has significantly less salience than hurricane risk for participants, our results suggest that case study communities have built generic elements of adaptive capacity that are generalizable to address both disturbances: (1) interactional and organizational capacities; (2) professional knowledge and extra-local networks; and (3) local knowledge, resources, and skills. We conclude by offering examples of what an ‘all-hazard’ community might look like based on the development of generic adaptive capacity.


Safety | 2018

Human Factors Affecting Logging Injury Incidents in Idaho and the Potential for Real-Time Location-Sharing Technology to Improve Safety

Soren Newman; Robert F. Keefe; Randall H. Brooks; Emily Ahonen; Ann Wempe

Human factors, including inadequate situational awareness, can contribute to fatal and near-fatal traumatic injuries in logging, which is among the most dangerous occupations in the United States. Real-time location-sharing technology may help improve situational awareness for loggers. We surveyed and interviewed professional logging contractors in Idaho to (1) characterize current perceptions of in-woods hazards and the human factors that lead to injuries; (2) understand their perspectives on using technology-based location-sharing solutions to improve safety in remote work environments; and (3) identify logging hazard scenarios that could be mitigated using location-sharing technology. We found production pressure, fatigue, and inexperience among the most-common factors contributing to logging injuries from the perspective of participants. Potential limitations of location-sharing technology identified included potential for distraction and cost. Contractors identified several situations where the technology may help improve safety, including (1) alerting workers of potential hand-faller injuries due to lack of movement; (2) helping rigging crews to maintain safe distances from yarded trees and logs during cable logging; and (3) providing a means for equipment operators to see approaching ground workers, especially in low-visibility situations.


Rural Sociology | 2013

A More Perfect Commodity: Bottled Water, Global Accumulation, and Local Contestation

Daniel Jaffee; Soren Newman


Journal of Forestry | 2013

Land Development Patterns and Adaptive Capacity for Wildfire: Three Examples from Florida

Soren Newman; Matthew S. Carroll; Pamela J. Jakes; Travis B. Paveglio


Biofuels, Bioproducts and Biorefining | 2016

Multi‐spatial analysis of forest residue utilization for bioenergy

Ryan Jacobson; Robert F. Keefe; Alistair M. S. Smith; Scott Metlen; Darin Saul; Soren Newman; Tamara Laninga; Daniel Inman


Journal of Forestry | 2018

Evaluation of Three Forest-Based Bioenergy Development Strategies in the Inland Northwest, United States

Darin Saul; Soren Newman; Steven Peterson; Eli Kosse; Ryan Jacobson; Robert F. Keefe; Stephen Devadoss; Tammy Laninga; Jill Moroney


Forest Science | 2017

The Devil is in the Details: Inland Northwest Stakeholders’ Views on Three Forest-Based Bioenergy Scenarios

Soren Newman; Darin Saul; Robert F. Keefe; Ryan Jacobson; Tamara Laninga; Jillian Moroney

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Pamela J. Jakes

United States Forest Service

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Ryan Jacobson

University of British Columbia

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Daniel Jaffee

Portland State University

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Tamara Laninga

Western Washington University

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